While the rapid advancement of immunotherapies has revolutionized cancer treatment, only a small fraction of patients derive clinical benefit. Eradication of large, established tumors appears to depend on engaging and activating both innate and adaptive immune system components to mount a rigorous and comprehensive immune response. Identifying such agents is a high unmet medical need, because they are sparse in the therapeutic landscape of cancer treatment. Here, we report that IL-36 cytokine can engage both innate and adaptive immunity to remodel an immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) and mediate potent antitumor immune responses via signaling in host hematopoietic cells. Mechanistically, IL-36 signaling modulates neutrophils in a cell-intrinsic manner to greatly enhance not only their ability to directly kill tumor cells but also promote T and NK cell responses. Thus, while poor prognostic outcomes are typically associated with neutrophil enrichment in the TME, our results highlight the pleiotropic effects of IL-36 and its therapeutic potential to modify tumor-infiltrating neutrophils into potent effector cells and engage both the innate and adaptive immune system to achieve durable antitumor responses in solid tumors.
Sumedha Roy, Karen Fitzgerald, Almin Lalani, Chin-Wen Lai, Aeryon Kim, Jennie Kim, Peiqi Ou, Annie Mirsoian, Xian Liu, Ambika Ramrakhiani, Huiren Zhao, Hong Zhou, Haoda Xu, Hans Meisen, Chi-Ming Li, Bryan Vander Lugt, Steve Thibault, Christine E. Tinberg, Jason DeVoss, Jackson Egen, Lawren C. Wu, Rajkumar Noubade
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